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Ulysses Killing the Boar

Niclaes Hellinck (fl.1559-1576)

Category

Tapestries

Date

circa 1550 - circa 1565

Materials

Tapestry, wool and silk, 7 warps per cm

Measurements

3500 mm (H); 2550 mm (W)

Place of origin

Brussels

Order this image

Collection

Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire

NT 1129448.1

Summary

Tapestry, wool and silk, 7 warps per cm, Ulysses Killing the Boar, from a set of 8 of the Story of Ulysses, Brussels, c. 1550-1565. This is the first tapestry in the narrative series. A boar runs into the scene from the right chased by two hunting dogs who are trying to drag it to the ground whilst Ulysses, standing in the centre with his legs planted wide apart, drives his spear into the back of its neck. In the background of the tapestry at the top are the rest of the hunting party including a man with a curved hunting horn and daggers tied to his belt, and a pack of dogs, one of whom has been gored and lies on the ground with its entrails pouring out. Amongst the trees a man and woman (possibly Autolycus and his wife) approach on horseback followed by a woman riding a mule and a bearded man on foot, and further back is the small figure of a man with a hunting dog straining at the leash. The setting is a forest landscape and in the foreground to the left are a small lizard and two frogs, whose significance is unclear. The fluttering skirt of Ulysses’ tunic is decorated with vines and small figures of huntsmen.

Full description

'Ulysses Killing the Boar' is an event from Ulysses’ youth. While staying with his mother’s father Autolycus, Ulysses and his uncles went hunting and were surprised in the forest by a huge boar. Ulysses was the first to act, rushing forward with his spear in his hand, but the boar was too quick and caught him above the knee with its tusk, leaving a deep gash in Ulysses’ thigh before he killed it (Odyssey, Book 19, 428-466). Although this is an episode early in Ulysses’ life it is recounted near the end of the Odyssey, after his return to Ithaca. It was the scar in Ulysses’ thigh that allowed Eurycleia, his nurse and faithful servant, to recognise him when he returned home and she was washing his feet, believing him to be a wandering beggar. The foot washing is depicted in the last tapestry in the series at Hardwick, The Homecoming of Ulysses (1129448.1). The eight tapestries at Hardwick tell the story of the classical hero Ulysses (Odysseus in Greek mythology), King of Ithaca. Ulysses was one of the principal champions of the Greek forces during the Trojan Wars as recounted in the ‘Iliad’ of Homer, and he was the hero of Homer’s ‘Odyssey’ which charts his lengthy wanderings again after the war was over before finally returning to Ithaca. Renowned for his resourcefulness and his stratagems, Ulysses was responsible for the famous wooden horse which allowed the Greeks to enter the city of Troy. After the war when the various armies returned home Ulysses and his men were subject to a number of trials and adventures. Eventually Ulysses lost his entire crew, and returned home to Ithaca only after twenty years of wandering. Meanwhile his palace had been beset by suitors for the hand of his beautiful wife Penelope, who feasted continually at the absent king’s expense; on his return Ulysses punished the suitors brutally. The designer of the Ulysses series is unknown but they have been associated on stylistic grounds with Michiel Coxcie (1499-1592) (Roethlisberger 1972), and this is also supported by documentary evidence (Roethlisberger 1972; Delmacel 1993). All eight tapestries bear the mark of the city of Brussels, two Bs either side of a red shield for Brussels and Brabant, in the lower right hand corner. In addition seven of the tapestries also bear one of three different maker’s marks in the lower right corner, and one has signs of a now destroyed mark. The first mark, containing the initials PVA, has most recently been attributed to Pieter van Aelst the younger (fl. 1509-1555) (Delmarcel 1992, p. 440; Delmarcel 1999, p. 363). The second mark, in the form of the letters ‘NH’ with a horizontal line above them, is almost certainly that of Niclaes Hellinck, who is recorded in 1559 and again in 1576 (Delmarcel 1980, p.9; Donnet 1894, p.452; Destrée 1900, pp. 32-33). The third mark, consisting of a vertical line, forked at the top, with three curved horizontal lines crossing it and a circle at the bottom, belongs to an unknown weaver. A similar mark appears on a document dated 1562 accompanied by the signature ‘Niclaes’ (Steppe 1981). The Ulysses tapestries probably date from the 1550s or 1560s. The eight tapestries at Hardwick are the earliest and most complete surviving weaving of a set that was extremely popular during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and numerous different weavings survive. These include a total of fifteen different episodes from the story. The most complete sets are in Schloss Herrnstein, North Rhine-Westphalia, and the Spanish Royal Collection (Junquera de Vega & Gallegos 1986, series 42). The tapestries have been at Hardwick since at least 1601, when they were recorded in an inventory of the house in their present position in the High Great Chamber. There is no record of their purchase, but Santina Levey has suggested that they were the set of hangings mentioned in the legal dispute between Bess and her fourth husband the Earl of Shrewsbury in 1586. One of the items that Shrewsbury claimed ownership of was “Item rich hangings 8 pieces which were Sir William Pickerings and bought by Mr Bateman which cost the Earl £200.” (Levey 1998, pp. 15, 23). Sir William Pickering (1516/17-1575) was English Ambassador to France from 1551-53, and an active patron and collector, with a particular interest in literature. Accused of plotting against Queen Mary’s Spanish marriage in 1553 he narrowly escaped arrest in Paris and spent the following year travelling in Italy and Germany. In December 1554 he was pardoned and in March 1555, a plausible date for the production of the tapestries, he was in Brussels; soon afterwards he was allowed home. Had Pickering wished to purchase or commission a set of tapestries in Brussels the story of Ulysses would certainly have been appropriate, as he was on his way home from an Odyssey in which he had narrowly escaped death. (Helen Wyld, 2009)

Provenance

Woven in Brussels, c. 1550-65; recorded in the inventory of Elizabeth, Countess of Shrewsbury at Hardwick Hall in 1601, hanging in the High Great Chamber; thence by descent to Andrew, 11th Duke of Devonshire; acquired through the National Land Fund in 1956 and transferred to the National Trust in 1959

Credit line

Hardwick Hall, The Devonshire Collection (acquired through the National Land Fund and transferred to The National Trust in 1959)

Marks and inscriptions

In cartouche in upper border: FORMOSVS PVER VLIXES VICIT APRVM / PRIVS CIRCA PEDEM ACCEPTO VVLNERE Lower galloon, left: 'BB' either side of a red shield Lower galloon, right: 'NH' joined, with a horizontal line above

Makers and roles

Niclaes Hellinck (fl.1559-1576), tapestry weaver probably Michiel Coxcie the Elder (Mechelen 1499 - Mechelen 1592), artist

References

Delmarcel, 1999: Guy Delmarcel, Flemish Tapestry, Tielt 1999 Levey, 1998: Santina M. Levey, An Elizabethan inheritance: the Hardwick Hall textiles. London: National Trust, 1998. Delmarcel, 1992: Guy Delmarcel, ‘Aelst, Pieter van (d.j.)’, in Gunter Meissner (ed.), Allgemeines Künstlerlexic: die bildend Künstler aller Zeiten und Völker, vol. 1, Munich/Leipzig 1992, p. 440 Junquera de Vega and Gallegos, 1986: Paulina Junquera de Vega and Carmen Díaz Gallegos, Catalogo de Tapices del Patrimonio nacional, volumen II: siglo XVII, Madrid 1986 Steppe 1981 Jan Karel Steppe, ‘Enkele nieuwe gegevens betreffende tapijtwerk van de geschiedenis van Vertumnus en Pomona vervaardigd door Willem de Pannemaker voor Filips II van Spanje’, Artes Textiles, X (1981), pp. 125-140 Delmarcel, 1980: Guy Delmarcel, Tapisseries Anciennes d’Engien, Mons 1980 Roethlisberger 1972 Marcel Roethlisberger, ‘The Ulysses tapestries at Hardwick Hall’, Gazette des Beaux-Arts, vol. 79, 114th year, 6th series, no. 1237 (Feb. 1972), pp. 111-125 Roethlisberger 1971 Marcel Roethlisberger, ‘Deux tentures bruxelloises du milieu du XVIe siècle’, Oud Holland, 1971 pp. 88-115 Destrée 1900 Joseph Destrée, L’industrie de la tapisserie à Enghien et dans la seigneurie de ce nom, Enghien 1900 Donnet, 1894: Fernand Donnet, ‘Les tapisseries de Bruxelles, Enghien et Audenarde pendant la furie Espagnole (1576)’, Annales de la société d’Archéologie de Bruxelles, vol. 8 (1894), pp. 442-476

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